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Inhabiting the Impasse


Racial/Racial-Colonial Power, Genocide Poetics,
and the Logic of Evisceration
Dylan Rodrguez

This article examines the concept of genocide as an incomplete accounting


of gendered racial and racial-colonial violence. The capacity to eliminate
populations, geographies, ecologies, and ways of life remains the epochal
potential at the heart of global racial modernity and its long historical
present. What we are confronting is the legacy of the mid-twentieth-
century enunciation of the genocide concept, in and beyond the 1948 UN
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,
as a totalizing notion of an alleged extremity of modern power that begins
to induce, but cannot fully engage, a delineation of the violences, exterminations, and fatalities encompassed by the long preceding, long following
processes of global racial ordering and modern civilization as such.
I leave aside, for another time, the extensive and tedious academic
and legal quarrels over the juridical and scholarly definitions, historical
inclusivity, pragmatic juridical and methodological effectiveness, and
peculiar singularity of the term genocide as a production and projection
of the modern human rights and Western academic knowledge regimes.1
For now, the question is whether and how the racial and racial-colonial
violences that are insufficiently invoked, marginally referenced, and pragmatically compartmentalized by hegemonic genocide discourses are precisely the forms of constitutive dehumanization that precede, constitute,
and overwhelm the very thing(s) that genocide intends to apprehend and,
ultimately, definitively name.
Anticolonial theorist and revolutionary Aim Csaire, writing at a
moment coterminous with the inception of Western academic-juridical
genocide discourse, exposes the furtive racist parochialism of its origins:
Social Text 124 Vol. 33, No. 3 September 2015
DOI 10.1215/01642472-3125689 2015 Duke University Press

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And they wait, and they hope; and they hide the truth from themselves, that
it is barbarism, the supreme barbarism, the crowning barbarism that sums
up all the daily barbarisms; that it is Nazism, yes, but that before they were
its victims, they were its accomplices; that they tolerated that Nazism before
it was inflicted on them, that they absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized
it, because, until then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples;
that they have cultivated that Nazism, that they are responsible for it, and
that before engulfing the whole edifice of Western, Christian civilization in
its reddened waters, it oozes, seeps, and trickles from every crack. 2

In Csaire we find that the emergence of a hegemonic Western genocide discourse is animated by a narrative privileging of white life/death
as the instance through which other peoples encounters with Western
modernitys logics of racial extermination/terrorexperiences centuries
in the making and global in their distensionsa re to be apprehended,
calibrated, and conceptually qualified. Despite Nazisms orchestration of
a sophisticated racist Aryan regime and its targeting of ostensibly inferior
racial stock for social and physical liquidation, 3 Csaire reminds us that
the real scandal of its ascendancy was in Nazisms infraracialization and
industrialized killing of millions of otherwise white Europeans.4
It is from within this white supremacist dilemmaa brutal chauvinism that is a keystone of racial modernityt hat Frantz Fanon writes his
famous essay The Fact of Blackness. Echoing Csaire, Fanon demystifies the condition of the white-on-white Holocaust by revisiting the permanence of black ontological subjection to the modern racial order:
Simple enough, one has only not to be a nigger. Granted, the Jews are
harassedwhat am I thinking of? They are hunted down, exterminated,
cremated. But these are little family quarrels. The Jew is disliked from the
moment he is tracked down. But in my case everything takes on a new guise.
I am given no chance. I am overdetermined from without. I am the slave not
of the idea that others have of me but of my own appearance.5

Here I am engaging Fanons refusal to genuflect to the white supremacist


sanctity of the dominant genocide narrative, reframed as a white European family quarrel. I am especially attentive to his elaboration of the
peculiar logics of humiliation, degradation, terror, and death to which
black being is subjected in excess of its physiological destruction. To be
hunted down, exterminated, cremated is the consistent social condition
of black life in modern Western social formations, and for Fanon these
forms of visceral attack compose nothing more than the latter stages of
an exterminating logic of violence that both precedes the physical act
of brutalization and killing and provides assurance and coherence to
the historical spectacle of the Nazi-conducted white/Jewish Holocaust.
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The (seemingly) exceptional, acute, and temporally discrete character of


the Nazi-produced genocide simply cannot compare with the unnamed
epochal violence that structures the formation of black life/being, yet the
Nazis rely on the precedents and coterminous examples of such violence
to construct their modernist innovation of industrial killing.6
Genocide, as a modern conceptual and jurisprudential formulation,7 is the impasse of the racial: to invoke its terms already suggests
exceptionality and absolute abnormality, yet the making of racial power, in
all its iterations, rests on logics of the genocidal that collapse into regimes
of normalcy/normativity, universality/humanism, and sociality/civil society. Racializationt hat is, the characterization and discursive marking
of human bodies and groups within hierarchical valuations of life and
beingstructures and permeates virtually every form of social differentiation, external identification, military-police mobilization, jurisprudence, national development, and environmental intervention (from the
destructive to the allegedly protective) in modern globality as well as its
precedents in the conquest period. The logics of genocide, shaped in the
material-h istorical domains of the formation of global racialization, thus
paradoxically precede the inauguration of the genocide nomenclature
that is, of the term itselfduring the postwar period. Following Joy James,
it is precisely in tracing the long genealogies of racism than we can already
find prima facie evidence of its logical culmination in genocide.8
This genocidal logic surfaces in the dispersal of human beings
within what Sylvia Wynter identifies as the construction of modernitys
fatal racial continuumt he devastating distinction and schematic binary
of existence separating the selected from the dysselected (the latter,
for Wynter, the category of natives and niggers):
By placing human origins totally in evolution and natural selection . . . [the
bourgeois/white thinkers of the modern West] map the structuring principle
of their now bourgeois social structure, that of the selected versus dysselected,
the evolved versus non- evolved, on the only still extra-humanly determined
order of difference which was left available in the wake of the rise of the
physical and, after Darwin, of the biological, sciences. This is the difference
that was provided by the human hereditary variations which we classify as
races. This is where Du Boiss colour line comes in.9

Wynters (and Du Boiss) conception of racial modernity stresses the


emergence of the overlapping Western scientific and humanistic epistemes as knowledge forms that symbiotically intertwine the (rationalist)
production of racial difference (via the biological, social, and natural sciences) with the discursive-ideological, thus broadly cultural, installation
of global white ascendancy. Modern raciality produces the latter discursivity through fluctuating notions of historical telos, aesthetic-c ultural
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supremacy, and the white humans transparency10 as a meta-symbiosis


of power/dominance that aspires to apprehend, shape, and anticipate
human destiniesgenerally, globally, and permanently.
The genocide concept is thus stalked and disrupted by the world-
making, civilization-building, socially productive technologies of racial
dominance that have made possible the consolidation of the very units of
socialityhumanity, the civilized world, mankind, nation-state, and the
internationalon which the UN Genocide Convention (and hegemonic
genocide discourses more generally) depends for its epistemic and juridical cogency. Perhaps, then, it is necessary to consider less whether genocide provides an adequate rubric within which to categorize particular
forms of racial power and violence to render them legible to mankind
and the civilized world (in the words of the Convention itself),11 and
more whether the distended field of genocide discourse creates a largely
unintended opening into a radical critique of the very civilized humanity
it intends to righteously defend.
I. We Charge Genocide (Redux)

The political legibility (and ethical traction) of the term genocide and its
accompanying legal regime remain useful leverage points for movements
and collectivities struggling to win ground against various forms of racial
and racial-colonial oppression. The classic 1951 accusation of antiblack
genocide lodged against the US government in the 1951 We Charge Genocide petition12 and the devastating global diagnosis articulated by the 2007
UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples13 exemplify the possibilities of such strategic work. Rather than reading such praxis as a series
of isolated, stand-a lone attempts at seizing the human rights apparatus,
however, it may be more useful to situate it in a continuum of radical challenges to racial and racial-colonial power that mobilizes the terms of genocide within and beyond formal juridical capacities (e.g., Chicago-based
grassroots movement We Charge Genocide [WCG], Palestinians organizing against Israeli occupation/apartheid, and prison and carceral abolitionists). It is necessary in these instances to consider whether and how
such struggles are deploying the genocide concept to burst the discursive
seams of other, prevailing languages that avert acute reference to conditions of normalized, racially formed suffering and degradation. Genocide,
when repurposed as a tactical description of racial and racial-colonial terror, has a way of tearing apart the edifices of liberal-progressive pretension
that tend to suggest the possibility of rigorous state and societal reform as
the difficult but achievable solutions to a social order that is structured in
racial dominance.14
As a recent example, the intergenerational organizers of Chicagos
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WCG write in their September 2014 report to the UN Committee against


Torture,
The prevalence of harassment, involuntary searches, and verbal abuse are
not the result of unusual transgressions by select, individual CPD [Chicago
Police Department] officers. Rather, they are illustrative of institutional
racial bias and systemic endorsement of targeting and harassment of young
people of color. . . . This cruel and degrading treatment of Chicagos youth
of color serves to silence, traumatize, and control entire communities. It creates a climate where youth of color feel unsafe and learn that they always are
suspects and that their lives are not valued in the eyes of the state.15

This document, Police Violence against Chicagos Youth of Color, defies the
limits of conventional activist and antiracist languages of police brutality, mass incarceration, and racial profiling by narrating a condition of
comprehensive endangerment and vulnerability to everyday, normally
functioning, nonscandalous racist state power. Deploying the category
of police violence throughout the fifteen-
page report (with sections
titled, e.g., Chicago Police Violence: Harassment and Abuse, Chicago
Police Violence: Use of Deadly Force, Chicago Police Violence: Sexual
Assaults) and infusing the text with testimonials from black and Latino/a
youth, WCG mounts a stunningly lucid rejoinder to the Foucauldian disciplinary society and Agambenian state of exception and short-circuits
liberal-progressive desires for police accountability. (While WCG supports efforts for police reform and accountability, its stated mission is to
end police violence and not merely to demand formal justice for incidents
of excessive or ostensibly criminal police brutality.)16
This work erodes the illusions of outrageous exceptionality (as well
as the stubborn androcentrism) that often shape the circulation of and
activist mobilizations around individual cases of police assassination of
black men and boys (most recently, e.g., Oscar Grant, Trayvon Martin,
Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and Tamir Rice). Rather than fixating on
bringing individual bad cops to trial so they can be prosecuted by the
very same racist state apparatus that equips them with deadly impunity
in the first place, WCG argues for broadly pitched conceptions of justice
and accountability that include but are not restricted to aggressive institutional reforms and advocates community-based self-determination, as
well as subordination of police authority to the collective will and oversight of ordinary (poor, working-class, criminalized black, brown) people.
Crucially, the organization firmly aligns itself with a particular historical
stream of black radicalism, citing the title of the 1951 UN petition filed
by the black communist-led Civil Rights Congress as its political guidance and the inspiration for its name and signifying an early twenty-fi rst-
century accusation against a (proto-)genocidal racist state. This deliberate
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historical resonance hemorrhages any residual notions of Chicago as a


thriving post-Obama-presidency, postracial city.
Against the arrogant predilections of the UN Genocide Convention
in its pronounced intent to protect mankind from the ultimate scandal of
mass-fatal violence, WCG is clearly not interested in any such universalisms and is engaged in the immediate and militant defense of the existence
of a localized black and brown humanity. As this insurgency against the
policing force of the racist state is animated by a black radical genealogy,
it patterns its organizational practices within a sober, grounded analysis
of a surrounding climate of intensive, systemic, numbingly normal racist
terror, invasiveness, and physiological vulnerability.
Here, then, is an exemplary point of departure for my larger argument: against the hegemonic legal and academic institutionalizations of
genocide discourse, and in disruption of the structured conflation of genocides violences and victimizations with humanist and white supremacist
universalisms, the tactical articulation of genocide as a particular narrative of racial and racial-colonial power indicates (a) the apparent insufficiency of existing critical/activist arsenals to the task of communicating the gravity of surrounding (and historical) conditions of existence
for particular (racially targeted) people and (b) an immanent critique of
genocide as an institutionalized global rhetoric that was and is never
intended to be purposed toward an indictment of the US government,
police, military, or civil society.
A vast body of scholarship has demonstrated how multiple genealogies of racial and racialized dominance defy equilibration and easy comparison: each lineage of racial violence requires specific, situated analysis
and critical/archival delineation, even and especially as scholarly activist
practices continually work to narrate and mobilize around the possible
relationalities between these singular genealogies. In abrogation of this
careful work, the institutionalized rhetorics of genocide, from the United
Nations to the academic field of genocide studies, suggest a discrete but
identifiably common historical modality of modern suffering within
which an otherwise discrepant totality of human experiences can be
rationalized, remediated, and potentially repairedor at least universally
acknowledged. Yet, if we part ways with these rather arrogant pretensions
of hegemonic genocide discourses, and thus allow for the possibility that
racial powers constitutive dehumanizations are both the precursor and
conceptual disarticulation of genocides allegations of coherence, there
may be some use in appropriating and refurbishing genocides vernacular and conceptual legibilities to furnish a critical apprehension of the
bottom-line, lowest common denominators of racial and racial-colonial
power.
Put another way, the mind-numbing, inexhaustible devastation that
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genocide attempts to access seems to already escape its parameters of


discursive engagement precisely because such devastation is, finally, not
exceptional, abnormal, or historically episodic when accounting for the
historical continuums of racial and racial-colonial dominance.
A certain rejoinder is made possible and necessary by this line of
inquiry, particularly to the extent that much theoretical and empirical
thinking around the historical processes of racialization is structured
in the assumption of a relatively (i.e., empirically) identifiable spectrum
of violence and exclusion, within which can be identified variations in
the contingency, paradigmatic permanence, and relationality within and
between different modalities of race making (e.g., racialization as reducible to the sociological range of race relations, from plural societies to
apartheid and colonization). Different schemas of racialization permeate
the critical scholarly and activist fields, suggesting both a fungibility and
paradigmatic hierarchy of racial power that roughly flows from assimilation and multiculturalist inclusion to chattel deracination and colonialist
extermination/occupation. Certainly, the flourishing debates within and
between black studies, settler-colonial studies, and critical ethnic studies
(some of which have been undertaken in this very journal) are contributing a rather massive rethinking of theoretical and pedagogical approaches
to race, coloniality, political ontology, and social movement. Of interest
here are the possibilities and pitfalls of considering genocide as another
keyword in the unfolding critical discourses of racial and racial-colonial
power. If we concede, for now, that this concept cannot truly be disi nterred
from its foundations in modern human rights jurisprudence and the epistemic regimes of Western liberal (academic) humanism, the question at
hand may have less to do with whether hegemonic genocide discourses
can be effectively (much less definitively) appropriated and refashioned
for other kinds of radical political and critical intellectual praxis.
Rather, the challenge may be to consider how the genocide concept lives and moves on the underside and disavowed edges of dominant
genocide regimes, where use of the term signifies things in excess of its
established definitional and legal formalities. What work does a particular
mobilization of the term genocide do for antiracist, liberation-oriented,
radical insurgencies against the modern sociojuridical order? On the
other hand, how do certain forms of counter-and antisystemic, antiracist
rebellion explicate logics of violence that resonate withwhile ultimately
rupturing

t he historical and conceptual limits of modern genocide


discourses?
Our central question here, then, is not necessarily whether it is a
critical priority to engage with the hegemonic regimes of genocide jurisprudence and academic study (aka genocide studies), nor is it a matter
of whether genocide is an appropriate or adequate conceptual tool for
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explicating the fatal logics of racialization. Privileging these methodological questions averts a more urgent critical problem: whether disloyal,
deforming, and even formally incorrect appropriations and rearticulations
of genocide are themselves indicative of a composite methodological
and rhetorical strategy for identifying the bottom line(s) of racial and
racial-colonial power/violence as the experience(s) of obliteration, social
liquidation, and veritable collective extinction.
The disruptive political audacity and transformative power mustered
by groups like WCG lie in the fact that their conditions of urgencyt he
convergence of immediate and deeply historical, systemic endangerment
that is at least momentarily illuminated when invoking the languages and
significations of genocideoverride the question of whether their use
of the term genocide is fully abiding by proper legal standards or academic definitions. WCG, in something like an exemplary form, inhabits
the discourse of genocide in the manner of a pure accusation, a complex knowledge-praxis of counterstate aggression that is buttressed by its
own rigorous scholarly methods of testimonial and fact gathering. This
is but one example of a grassroots, scholarly activist insurgency that is a
countersalvo against the buzzing reality of the accumulating casualties of
undeclared gendered racist domestic warfare,17 waged by the state, and
generally endorsed by a popular white/multiculturalist common sense.
Another ongoing critical challenge, then, is to theoretically and
politically engage with these disruptive and disrupted discourses of genocide, the enunciations of which catalyze epistemological, theoretical, and
cultural departures from hegemonic genocide knowledge apparatuses.
The significance of the mobilization of the language and accusation of genocide, in these and other geographies and historical moments
of racial and racial-colonial power and state violence, does not lie in the
juridical feasibility of the actual or potential accusation and charge, nor is
it in the terms (incomplete) capacity to bring definitive, totalizing legibility to the suffering and casualties of particular, racialized human populations. Rather, such are moments of artistry and creativity, where genocide
becomes the keyword in a morbid and weaponized poetry of insurrection,
an irruptive announcement of emergency within a state of normalcy, echoing Raphal Lemkins paradigmatic (though stubbornly underengaged)
definition of genocide as a problem not only of war but also of peace.18
To consider this poetry in its fullest artistry is to grasp other epistemic, ontological, and collective physiological positionsto consider how
the genocide charge, as affirmation of a shared coursing of shed blood
and resistant life, is also confirmation of racial power as Fanonist epidermalization in its most capacious and deindividualized rendition. As a
result, the body schema, attacked in several places, collapsed, giving way
to an epidermal racial schema.19 When genocide becomes the chosen
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articulation for those inhabiting the historical edges of racialization via


the racist carceral, chattel, settler state, there is a laceration of the societal-
institutional flesh that coheres normalized, institutionalized dehumanization. At times, such articulationssuch charges and accusationscan be
made without ever using the word genocide itself, and it is in such moments
that critical interpretation and renarration constitute a potentially radical praxis of the most immediate kind. It is toward a couple such recent
examples that we now turn.
II. Freedom Nondemands:
The Georgia (2010) and California (2011) Prison Strikes

Racial and racial-colonial power is structured in perpetuity, crossing


while reconfiguring temporalities and geographies, permeating history,
social experience, and the struggle toward human being for those people
subjected to its different regimes. By invoking such vital genealogies of
struggle, we follow Wynters lead in conceptualizing human being as a
lived and suffered verb rather than a Western humanist or white supremacist universalized noun. Writing in the aftermath of the 1992 Los Angeles
rebellions, Wynter meditates at length on the mundane police jargon of
N.H.I. (no humans involved)a racist acronym frequently used in 911
and beat patrol radio transmissions to describe incidents involving black
peopleas a reference to both the fundamental precarity (hence foundational impossibility) of black civil existence and the institutional implications of normalized, social liquidation: For the social effects to which
this acronym [N.H.I.], and its placing outside the sanctified universe of
obligation, of the category of young Black males to which it refers . . .
whilst not overtly genocidal, are clearly having genocidal effects with the
incarceration and elimination of young Black males by ostensibly normal,
and everyday means.20 For those whose humanity is held in question or
denied, the practice of human being already requires revolt against the
technologies of elimination, social liquidation, and terror that invite such
consideration of the material termsthe effectsof genocidal logics.
Racial and racial-colonial poweras global elaborations of what Cedric
Robinson identifies as a civilizational, intra-European racialism 21a re
not exclusively produced by or in the temporal and institutional formation of Western modernity but are the conditions of modernitys material
and philosophical integrity as such. The racial and racial-colonial are the
animating power within modern power and form the disavowed referents
for the exceptionalities of genocide as such.
There are few places where the explication of this logic of modern
sociality is more lucidly executed than in the theoretical and political texts
and testimonials generated by the 2010 Georgia prisoners strike and the
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2011 Pelican Bay Prison (and California-state-prison-w ide) hunger strike.


(While the Pelican Bay strike launched a second phase in 2013, I focus
on its inaugural moments here.) First I present a brief description of each
movement.
Initiated by thousands of (overwhelmingly black) people incarcerated in mens prisons across the state, the Georgia prisoners strike began
as a one-day action on 9 December 2010 and was recognized as the largest
prison strike in US history. The strike organizers press release brought
attention to the inhumane practices of the Georgia Department of Corrections (DOC) and called for public support to force the DOC to stop
treating [imprisoned people] like animals and slaves and institute programs that address their basic human rights.22 Utilizing contraband cell
phones, the strike assumed a variety of nonviolent resistance tactics across
Georgia state prisons, including work stoppages, a refusal to exit cells,
and in some cases a refusal to eat. The strike continued for almost a week.
While it was largely neglected and, at best, vastly underreported by mainstream and Left media outlets alike (with the notable exceptions of online
venues Black Agenda Report and Facing South), the Georgia prisoners
strike nonetheless galvanized a contingency of national support among
imprisoned and nonimprisoned people.
The strikers political language and organizing strategies catalyze a deeper reflection on its historicized analysis of racist state power.
First, the participants strategic use of nonviolence and public appeals
likely restrained Georgia state authorities from potentially following
the paradigmatically murderous examples of state officials and prison
guards in the deadly 1971 San Quentin (CA) and Attica (NY) Rebellions (among others). It cannot be overstated that a central dimension
of the strikers political success is that their strategies and tactics largely
forestalled the states historical predilections to inflict massive (and even
spectacle-inducing) bodily violence and juridical-corporeal punishment
on incarcerated people during such moments of collective insurgency.
Still, Georgia DOC and state officials engaged in semicontained, strategic,
and violent counterinsurgency against the strike leaders, participants, and
other imprisoned people during and after the strike. This state response is
theoretically significant because it encompasses an attempted repression
of the radical extracarceral politicizations that might unfold in response
to the strike (I elaborate this below).
Second, the Georgia prisoners strike explicitly used the language
of slavery to articulate the historical and experiential dimensions of racist
state violence in its everyday institutional-carceral form:23 The prisoners fault the [Georgia DOC] for having prisoners work for free in violation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution prohibiting slavery and
involuntary servitude.24 A series of other testimonial and investigative
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accounts revealed that, across racial subjectivities, the Georgia strikers


assembled common political ground through a collective renarration of
the degrading conditions of incarceration as affixations of the historical
power structures of antiblack racial domination.25 Third, the languages
of the Georgia prisoners strike (particularly in its formal demands, outlined below) complicate notions of labor and workers within contemporary progressive critiques of neoliberalism, and particularly within critical
Marxist discourses that do not account for the systemic productivities and
extracapitalist economies of the racialized policing-carceral regime. The
strikers, in this sense, articulated themselves as simultaneously inhabiting the categories of civil death (convicted person), slaves, and captive
workers.
On the heels of the Georgia strike, the 2011 Pelican Bay hunger
strike was remarkable for having been conceived and led by people (overwhelmingly black and Latino) incarcerated in Californias security housing units (SHUs), high-designation forms of imprisonment in which people are segregated from the mainline prison population and disallowed
any direct, physical human contact beyond encounters with correctional
officers. Organized through a variety of illicit and creative means (which
I will not expose here), the strikers crystallized their collective, long-
running grievances against the administrative protocols of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) for (often
indefinitely) assigning people to the SHUs and subjecting them to regular
routines of sustained sensory deprivation, malign medical neglect, and
low-i ntensity torture (sleep deprivation, inedible and nonnutritious foods,
lack of exposure to outdoors, constant noise, etc.), as well as periodic cell
extractions and routine invasive body searches. 26
The 1 July initiation of the movement sparked solidarity actions
among some 6,500 other incarcerated people across the California state
system, and the Pelican Bay hunger strike immediately garnered the attention of a broad community of antiprison, prison reform, prisoners rights,
and carceral abolitionist activists and advocates. Within days, the strike
catalyzed a national sweep of allied prison and jail insurgencies, including prison strikes at the Ohio State Penitentiary, Red Onion State Prison
(VA), Marion Communication Management Unit (IL), and Collins Bay
Institution, a correctional facility in Kingston, Ontario. 27 The Prisoner
Hunger Strike Solidarity coalition became the primary free-world correlate of the Pelican Bay strikers and included active participation and support from such well-k nown organizations and advocacy groups as Legal
Services for Prisoners with Children, All of Us or None, Campaign to
End the Death Penalty, California Prison Focus, Prison Activist Resource
Center, Critical Resistance, California Coalition for Women Prisoners,
and American Friends Service Committee. 28
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The first phase of the Pelican Bay strike lasted three weeks, after
which the CDCR promised a thorough review of its policies. Dissatisfied
with the CDCRs failure to respond to the original five core demands, the
hunger strike reignited on 26 September 2011 and inspired an even wider
network of prison strikes, encompassing about twelve thousand participants in California, Arizona, Mississippi, and Oklahoma (the latter three
states incarcerate a number of people who have been exported from California). This second phase of the Pelican Bay strike again lasted several
weeks and was succeeded by a number of peer political actions throughout
California for months thereafter. As of this writing, it is apparent that
the Pelican Bay hunger strike has constructed a paradigm and method
for carceral political action that is likely to breed similar forms of collective rebellion in and beyond California, in continuity with the landmark
mobilization of July 2011. 29
Such a concise description of these two prison strikes would be
incomplete without an explicit remark on the gendered organization of
political labor that permeated the conditions of both. The strikes were
initiated by people incarcerated in mens prisons, while much of the grassroots mobilizing, public discursive production, and other activist work
(hand-to-hand circulation of petitions, Facebook and social media organizing, press conferences, community informational workshops, college
campus lectures, etc.) were carried out by women, usually loved ones
and (immediate as well as extended) family members of the imprisoned
strikers. This differentiation of labor, mobility, voice, and institutional
position refracts the gendered conditions of violence that emanate outward from physical sites of incarceration: in the context of a late 2011
student research project and public event at the University of California,
Riverside, a number of the women who bore leadership responsibilities for
the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity coalition spoke rigorously and with
analytical density of how their imprisoned loved ones experiences in the
Pelican Bay SHU shaped and deformed their own, ostensibly free-world
existence in proximity to a racist carceral state. 30 Their testimonials not
only educated ordinary people about the societal significance of the strike
as a rebellion against a racial-carceral social order but also illuminated
how the power of the prison is not compartmentalized by the discrete,
seemingly faraway geographic sites of imprisoned peoples institutionalized sufferingt hat is, Pelican Bay (and the criminalization/incarceration
apparatus writ large) is not simply somewhere else for loved ones struggling in the free world. Rather, the coalition speakers suggested that the
SHU represents a center of gravity for a larger regime of deeply personal
domination, humiliation, and everyday terrort he signature technologies
of racializations violence as sucht hat follows those who are its generalized, unexceptional targets.
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This complex gendering of the prison regimes multiple layers of


violence thus structures and haunts31 the generally masculinist representation of the prison strikes political culture and symbolic apparatus and
directs attention toward the extended aftermath of both strikes as a condition that is borne by both the imprisoned (cisgender, queer, and trans)
men and their distended relations with children, elders, loved ones, and
others in the so-called free world. In this particular way, the Pelican Bay
hunger strike critically builds on radical feminist antiracist framings of
the prison industrial complex and its expansive, extracarceral technologies of domination. 32
While much more must be done to adequately apprehend the complexity of these two movements, I focus here on the Georgia and California prison strikes primary public texts: their issuance of public demands.
Georgia Prison Strike Demands (issued 8 December 2010)

A Living Wage for Work: In violation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution prohibiting slavery and involuntary servitude, the DOC demands
prisoners work for free.

Educational Opportunities . . .
Decent Health Care: In violation of the 8th Amendment prohibition against
cruel and unusual punishments, the DOC denies adequate medical care to
prisoners, charges excessive fees for the most minimal care and is responsible for extraordinary pain and suffering.

An End to Cruel and Unusual Punishments: In further violation of the 8th
Amendment, the DOC is responsible for cruel prisoner punishments for
minor infractions of rules.

Decent Living Conditions: Georgia prisoners are confined in over-c rowded,
substandard conditions, with little heat in winter and oppressive heat in
summer.

Nutritional Meals . . .

Vocational and Self-Improvement Opportunities . . .

Access to Families: The DOC has disconnected thousands of prisoners from
their families by imposing excessive telephone charges and innumerable
barriers to visitation.

Just Parole Decisions: The Parole Board capriciously and regularly denies
parole to the majority of prisoners despite evidence of eligibility. 33

Pelican Bay Hunger Strike Demands (written 3 April 2011,


widely issued 1 July 2011)
1.
End Group Punishment and Administrative AbuseT his is in response to
PBSPs [Pelican Bay State Prisons] application of group punishment
as a means to address individual inmates rule violations. . . . This policy
has been applied in the context of justifying indefinite SHU status, and
progressively restricting our programming and privileges.
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2.Abolish the Debriefing Policy, and Modify Active/Inactive Gang Status CriteriaPerceived gang membership is one of the leading reasons for placement in solitary confinement. The practice of debriefing, or offering
up information about fellow prisoners particularly regarding gang status,
is often demanded in return for better food or release from the SHU.
Debriefing puts the safety of prisoners and their families at risk, because
they are then viewed as snitches. . . .
3.
Comply with the US Commission on Safety and Abuse in Americas Prisons
2006 Recommendations Regarding an End to Long-Term Solitary ConfinementCDCR shall implement the findings and recommendations of
the US commission on safety and abuse in Americas prisons final 2006
report regarding CDCR SHU facilities as follows:
End Conditions of Isolation . . .
Make Segregation a Last Resort . . .
End Long-Term Solitary Confinement . . .
P rovide SHU Inmates Immediate Meaningful Access to: i) adequate
natural sunlight ii) quality health care and treatment. . . .
4.
Provide Adequate and Nutritious Foodcease the practice of denying
adequate food, and provide wholesome nutritional meals including special diet meals, and allow inmates to purchase additional vitamin supplements.
5.
Expand and Provide Constructive Programming and Privileges for Indefinite
SHU Status Inmates.
Examples include:
Expand visiting regarding amount of time and adding one day per
week.
A llow one photo per year.
A llow a weekly phone call.
Allow two (2) annual packages per year. A 30 lb. package based on
item weight and not packaging and box weight.34

Here I am not especially interested in outlining the administrative


and state responses to either set of the demands. A number of activist
and investigative media outlets and support organizations, including
those previously cited, have already undertaken this work rigorously and
exhaustively. Rather, I wish to challenge the somewhat reductive interpretation of these demands as exclusively tethered to the (presumably)
collective desire of incarcerated people to be officially recognized (by the
state and public) as full human beings (or even disavowed citizens) worthy of entitlement to access (a) the modern regimes of (civil and human)
rights and (b) the rudimentary protective and caretaking capacities of
the custodian state. That is, a simplistic reading might conclude that neither the Georgia nor California strike demands appear to be particularly
radical or insurgent. Rather, their contents seem to be quite reformist, even piecemeal: the imprisoned strikers are issuing demands that the
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respective prison administrations and states can quite feasibly meet, given
the surrounding political climate and actual institutional/state resources.
Yet, the impasse between the imprisoned strikers and the racist state
is already structured (i.e., determined) by a logic of social evisceration
this is the violence that exceeds the general conceptual apparatus of genocide while also inviting the invocation of its terms as a poetry of emergency: imprisoned people are not merely a socially disposable population.
The black and brown incarcerated are already disposed of, as the perpetual chattel-property of a postThirteenth Amendment racial-carceral
regime that clearly enunciates the continuities of racial and racial-colonial
dominance beyond the moment of emancipation as defined by the amendment itself: Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall
exist within the United States. Inhabiting this genealogy of domination
as a collective, complexly political, and creative act, the prison strikers
embrace the peculiar urgency imperative35 fashioned by a historically
racially genocidal state (Manifest Destiny, Middle Passage, racial chattel
plantation order, Philippine-A merican War, etc.) that has distended extra-
and supragenocidal violences into the everyday of policing, criminalization, and state capturethe essential institutional forms of Lemkins
peace, as it were.
In this context, the political statements issued by the incarcerated
strikers seem to curiously neglect one commonsense demand: there is no
rudimentary call for freedom, just clemency, or fair release. (The Georgia
demands call only for unspecified fairness in future parole decisions.)
What are we to make of this absent demand? Does the nondemand for
freedom/release constitute a collective resignation to the legal fate of
conviction? Is this silence a strategic concession to a seemingly indelible,
punitive popular consensus that reifies the status of those duly convicted,
rendering their captive status beyond the realm of reasonable political
questioning? Does the disappearance of the freedom demand intend to
enhance the more immediate possibilities of securing better nutrition,
medical care, family visits, and fairer parole protocols? On the other hand,
is the nondemand also a reflection of the punitive political climate within
which the strikes have been organized, in which the prospect of (racially
and gender marked, black and brown) prisoners striking for freedom
might be exploited by the racist state and its organic intellectuals to further criminalize and punish the strikers as actual or potential domestic
terrorists?
While there is likely some truth in each of these possibilities, another
trajectory of interpretation is both possible and necessary: the Georgia
and California demands are credible, reflexive, and historically lacerating statements about the social and cultural conditionthe peaceto
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which they are appealing, about the place of normalized evisceration and
racist state violence from which they have been conceived. That is, the
political languages and practical agendas of the strikes are confronting the
substructure of the carceral regimepeacea nd the extended political
common sense to which it is symbiotically linked. The strikers demands
are political statements issued from people inhabiting a site of formal civil
death and contemporary social death, 36 clarifying that prison is a condition of existence, not merely a fleeting blip in ones civil biography. How
else to make sense of the fact that the strikers are forced to demand the
figments of nourishment that might otherwise differentiate them from
bare life? Nutrition, human touch/communication, heat, medical care,
freedom from cruelty, and a couple photographsto be forced to mobilize
for such things, at the risk of further vulnerability to the technologies of
evisceration, is to articulate another kind of accusation.
Most of those participating in the Georgia and California strikes will
eventually be released, yet the delimited liberty of nonimprisonment
really, a recalibration from the status of actually imprisoned person to
formerly imprisoned personis not accompanied by the presumption of
a social future. At best, that free future will need to be struggled for and
won; at worst, that future is preemptively evacuated by the relative permanence of the juridical status and distended power relations of conviction,
imprisonment, and (racial) criminalization. The institutional and material circumstances of criminalization do not evaporate upon release from
incarceration. The temporal form of these demands is thus also disruptive
of a certain postcivil rights racial telos of liberal futurity.
The strikers, in lodging what are truly minimal demands, do not
presume their own biographical and physiological futures outside the time
and space of the prison. The strikes are a radically collective acknowledgment that racial criminalization and incarceration are simultaneously
points of ontological origin and (anti)social destination and that nominal
release from the prison is only a stage within the regimes structure of
perpetuity. Their demands refuse to dignify the very notion of freedom
on the other side of incarceration and initiate a radical delinking from any
universalized notion of a social future. Rather, the Georgia and California strikes lay claim to the notion that from prison there is nowhere and
no time to go, inviting a politics of possibility that cannot settle for other
than absolute creativityt hat is, a will to create against existing scripts
and even in defiance of apparent feasibilitiesw ithin maneuvers toward
total dis/reordering: a shattering of the peace.
Flowing from these recent examples, we might consider the possibility of building a critical and activist practice that inhabits the impasse
between genocide as a modern juridical-academic regime, the insurrec-

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tionist poetics of racial and racial-colonial genocide, and evisceration, as


a logic of racial and racial-colonial power.
III. The Logic of Evisceration

This closing departure articulates with the work of settler-colonial studies scholar Patrick Wolfe, while also stretching the historical and theoretical parameters of his arguments. Wolfes now well-k nown historical
theorization of settler colonialisms logic of elimination illuminates the
particular conditions of duress constituting Indigenous social formations and opens toward a radical analysis of the enmeshing antisocial
formations that permeate the postconquest settler-colonial sociocultural
text. 37 The logic of elimination, for Wolfe, reflects the absolute perpetuity of a historical process in which the Indigenous being is subjected to
physical, discursive, biological, and legal technologies of mitigation and
erasure: Settler colonialism destroys to replace.38 As such, the logic of
Indigenous elimination is and will remain central to the construction and
reproduction of modern state and juridical orders, as well as their constituting cultural orders: the Indianthat is, the figure of the Indian,
the remnants of Indigenous being and life modalities, the persistent and
haunting presences of Indigenous people within and beneath the modern
cultural-political ordermust always be subjected to elimination, even
and especially in the aftermath of their massive physical liquidation. Distinguishing elimination from genocide, Wolfe provides a durable and
nonteleological framework through which to examine the different global
permutations of the settler-colonial relation, which flourishes through
symbiotically complex forms of racial-colonial power; he argues persuasively, for example, that assimilation [of Indigenous people] should not be
seen as an invariable concomitant of settler colonialism. Rather, assimilation is one of a range of strategies of elimination that become favored in
particular historical circumstances.39
Wolfes logic of elimination enables a theory of gendered racial and
racial-colonial power that centers on a relational, dynamic conception of
world-a ltering violence that challenges the exceptionalist terms of genocide in its formalized juridical-academic uses. It is precisely through
Wolfes dynamic apprehension of Indigenous inhabitations of (and insurgencies against) the settler-colonial logic of elimination that we might
subtly depart from the otherwise delimited understanding of genocide
that marks his and other scholars critical projects. While I have elsewhere
engaged Wolfes misestimation of the historical applicabilities of the cate
gory of genocide (particularly in relation to African and Africa-derived
peoples experiences with the genocidal capacities of chattel enslavement
and apartheid), 40 I am more interested here in privileging the conceptual
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and theoretical openings created by his consistent attention to the historical present tense(s) of epochal, world-a ltering violences.
To read the genealogies of (modern) racialization alongside Wolfes
logic of elimination is to consider once again whether there is another
way, beyond reliance on the nomenclatures of genocide, to furnish a critical language that is both methodologically capacious and conceptually
acute enough to begin to differentiate the lowest common denominators of
racial and racial-colonial power from other forms of ordering, hierarchy,
and subjection. If genocide and the state of exception are not sufficient
to the ambitious task of such historical apprehension of racializations
bottom-line violences, is there another manner of thinking that is open
enough to promiscuous rearticulations to merit serious theoretical and
narrative attention? Is it possible to propose a language that is useful to
the inseparable tasks of explaining the complexities of racial dominance
and (re)telling different stories to and about ourselves in relation to the
historical present tense we have differently inherited?
At the risk of venturing a conceptual and theoretical project that
is more speculative than prescriptive, I close this piece with a counterthesis, inspired by the histories of radical praxis already invoked: that
racial and racial-colonial power, in their long historical present tense, are
constituted by a logic of evisceration to which differently racialized peoples
are subjected in varying degrees of relative force and permanence. This
conceptualization of violence attempts to burst the epistemic, definitional,
and historical parameters of hegemonic juridical-academic genocide discourses while resonating the artistry of antiracist, anti-racial-colonial
genocide poetics. Here I provide seven cursory elaborations of this analytic, with the qualification that they are offered as provisional rather than
definitive contributions to already existing critical and activist work.
First, the idea of eviscerationw ith its root meaning in the Latin
word for disembowel or, more literally, to remove the visceraputs
a particular focus on violence that is waged against the comprehensive
realm of the individual and collective physiology: evisceration names
the unbreakable connection between the psychospiritual and physical-
biological experience of world-a ltering violence and brings attention to
how different forms of racial and racial-colonial terror (desecration, threat
of sexual violence, symbolic degradation) may exert drastic physiological
consequences (depression, suicide, paranoia, cancer) even in the absence
of physical brutality. As multiple genealogies of Native and Indigenous,
black and Africa-descended, and radical anticolonialist third-world thinkers (particularly and centrally feminist, womanist, and queer thinkers)
have comprehensively argued, the focal points of New World civilizational
genocide, colonial and chattel slavery genocide, and modern and so-called
postcolonial genocide have, without exception, entailed institutionaliza36

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tions of violent aggression against different peoples psychic, spiritual, and


cultural integrity as such. These forms of eviscerating violence have always
had indelible effects on those same peoples physical health, capacities for
biological and social reproduction, and collective efforts to sustain their
generations as coherent and self-aware groups, tribes, and peoples. This is
why the distended historical and multigenerational experiences of evisceration must be distinguished from social, civil, or biological death, as well as
from genocide, biopower, necropolitics, and eurocentric states of exception.
Second, the logic of evisceration illuminates how the conception of
race as a global physiological signification has formed a complex technology of violence and terror, in and of itself. Here, the conceptual is also
already the visceral (and the eviscerating). The moment of racialization is
the inauguration of a hierarchy of life and death, an assemblage that both
anticipates and is the absolute precondition for the capacity to materially
initiate the fatal systems of such an order. By producing (i.e., inventing
and fabricating) the categorical objects of its discourses of knowledge/
degradation, racial power is already a life-or-death antagonism between
those who embody the positionality of a self-determined racial knowing
and those whose bodies/beings are deformed and otherwise dominated by
the regime of racial knowledge.41
Third, a deeper focus on racial power as a gendered technology
of evisceration helpfully displaces some of the hegemonic gender metanarratives enmeshing genocide and genocidal violence. Adam Jones, for
example, claims in his influential article Gendercide and Genocide
that it is the targeted killing of men that composes the primary gendering force in the history of mass murder, war, and genocide. Referencing
several examples from the 1980s and 1990s, Jones contends: Regardless,
and crucially, the most vulnerable and consistently targeted population group,
through time and around the world today, is noncombatant men of a battle
age, roughly 1555 years old.42 Joness claim becomes less credible, however, if the narrative centering of epochal violence encompasses longer
racial and racial-colonial genealogies of eviscerating (and arguably also
genocidal) violence.43 Within such regimes of evisceration, principally
racial-colonial conquest and racial-chattel social formations, the lived categories and abstracted classifications of gender and sexuality are subjected
to distortion, transgression, and manipulation/mutilation as a matter of
the infrastructural emergence of the gendered genocidal regimes themselves. Cultural and juridical attacks on the biological female womb, colonialist and chattel constructions of birth status inheritance (free/unfree,
citizen/noncitizen), and discursive constructions of women and gender-
queer people as objects of genocidal violence suggest the need for a critical theory of racial and racial-colonial power that focuses on the logic of
evisceration as an actively gendering form of powersuch violence does
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not merely come to bear on already existing, statically gendered bodies


but is itself engaged in the process of forcefully (re)defining and remaking gender/gendered sexuality as an integral aspect of its world-deforming
power. Radical feminist and queer conceptions of bodily/sexual violence,
for example, challenge the notion that rape and sexual brutality are merely
tactical or preparatory elements of racializing regimes; rather, as forms of
collective evisceration, such gendered sexual violences are ends in themselves and enact the logic of racial and racial-colonial power as a condition
of intimate and often systemic bodily subjection.
Fourth, the notion of a logic of evisceration can further enrich a
narrative countermethod that theoretically positions racial terror, dense
and collective experiences of physiological disarticulation and vulnerability, and the racial and racial-colonial disruption (if not almost complete
destruction) of peoples life worlds over and against the hegemonic legal
and academic genocide regimes privileging of scandals of massive body
counts and spectacular outbreaks of physical death. By privileging the
actual experiences of evisceration induced by racial and racial-colonial
power, the canonical narrative of the Nazi-produced Holocaust can no
longer subsist as the assumptive, bottom-l ine calibration of the most brutal capacities of modern (racist state) power. This incites a direct challenge
to the universalized narrative of the suffering and exterminated (white)
European body as the primary, if not paradigmatic, reference point for
genocidesa nd modern powersmost egregious casualties (e.g., Levis
autobiographical and Giorgio Agambens ethnographic and historical conceptualizations of the Muselmann).44 Alex G. Weheliyes incisive rejoinder
to Agambens furtive attempts to install the figure of the Muselmann as the
transcendence of race, and therefore politics, via the sublatory powers of
a radical post-Holocaust ethics is especially instructive in this instance.
Weheliye, resonating the central arguments herein, offers that racialization . . . operates simultaneously as the nomos and matrix of modern
politics45 and thus facilitates a conception of evisceration as a primary
technology through which race making unfolds in producing the modern
conditions of possibility for genocide, in its formal terms.
Fifth, the logic of evisceration focuses on how racial and racial-
colonial power are socially productive forms of violence that constitute
related (and sometimes overlapping and coconstituting) social formations,
during and beyond the formal institutional lives of such racist and colonial state and national systems as apartheid, land expropriation, chattel
slavery, and militarized conquest. Conceptualized as a determination of
the social and not simply as the antithesis or obliteration of it, the logic
of evisceration encompasses a form of power/dominance that is entirely
(if tacitly) central to normative discursive and institutional operations of
peace, democracy, and law and order.
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Sixth, the logic of evisceration encourages a reconsideration of social


determination and material substructure, reigniting critical conversations
with different Marxist and historical materialist traditions. A host of old
and new questions follow: What analytical and theoretical insightsa nd,
for that matter, what collective political practicesm ight be catalyzed by
way of locating the eviscerating violences of the racial and racial colonial
at the paradigmatic center of social and economic determinations at the
local, regional, and global scales? How does the logic of evisceration compose an economic circuit of its own, an interstice of labor, commodification, expropriation, and alienation that overlaps with but is not reducible
to other economies?
Seventh, a rigorous conceptualization of a logic of evisceration can
bring more focused historiographic and theoretical attention to the ways
that different peoples inhabitations of racial and racial-colonial violence
constitute the lasting impasse of power from which critical and radical
creativities mighta nd constantly doemerge. This may, in one sense,
reveal the true scandal of racialization as a long-h istorical formation of
power: that despite racial powers inclinations toward obliteration, capture,
liquidation, and subjection, irruptions of liberation and self-determination
persistently inhabit the logic of evisceration as the destabilization of racializations lowest common denominator.
A practical-t heoretical conception of evisceration as the constitutive
logic of racial and racial-colonial power can perhaps provide one schema
through which contemporary critical work can find stronger kinship with
longer genealogies of insurrection, radicalism, and revolutionary struggle.
To embrace the political creativities of such an inhabitation is to accept
an invitation to envision futurity, justice, reparation, human freedom, and
peace against their devastating conditions of historical possibility. Given
the historical circumstances of our pedagogical and intellectual labors,
this may amount to our own inheritance of the bottom line.
Notes
This work was influenced and encouraged by a community of thinkers, including Joo
Costa Vargas, Shana Redmond, Damien Sojoyner, Connie Wun, Antonio Tiongson
Jr., Danika Saltzman, Scott Morgensen, Anthony Bayani Rodrguez, Clyde Woods
(peace), Glen Coulthard, Setsu Shigematsu, Yusef Omowale and Michele Welsing of
the Southern California Library in Los Angeles, the students of the 2012 and 2014
Racial and Racial-Colonial Genocide graduate seminars at UC Riverside, and
participants in the Anti-Colonial Machine group (including Nasser Hussain, David
Lloyd, Fred Moten, J. Kameron Carter, Atef Said, Colin Dayan, Jodi Kim, Denise
Ferreira da Silva, Stefano Harney, Jared Sexton, and Sora Han). Special thanks to the
editors of Social Text and the two anonymous readers for their careful critique and
ultimate support. The author may be contacted at dylanrodriguez73@gmail.com.

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1. See Randall Williams, The Divided World: Human Rights and Its Violence
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2010).
2. Aim Csaire, Discourse on Colonialism, trans. Joan Pinkham (New York:
Monthly Review Press, 2000), 37.
3. See Simone Gigliotti and Berel Lang, eds., The Holocaust: A Reader (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005); and Christopher M. Hutton, Race and the Third Reich:
Linguistics, Racial Anthropology and Genetics in the Dialectic of Volk (Cambridge: Polity
Press, 2005).
4. While there is wide acknowledgment that the best-k nown targets of the
Nazi movements genocidal campaigns were generally marked as racial pathologues,
non-A ryans, and subhuman, the historical record shows that even these targeted
groupsJews, Romani (Gypsies), Slavs, queer and gender nonconforming, disabled
people, and so forthwere nonetheless racially differentiated from peoples of African descent, among others. That is, non-A ryan was not necessarily synonymous
with nonwhite, and the fatal gradations of hierarchized difference were largely constructed within a continuum of white raciality: for the Nazis, the mythical Aryan was
the supreme white being, against whom inferior and subhuman beingsincluding
other white beingswere defined. By contrast, the historical evidence indicates that
the Nazi regime targeted the racially black for sterilization, elimination, and peculiar forms of segregation, while clearly delineating African-derived people as separate
from all other non-A ryans.
5. Frantz Fanon, The Fact of Blackness, in Black Skin, White Masks, trans.
Charles Lam Markmann (London: Pluto Press, 2008), 87.
6. Omer Bartov, Murder in Our Midst: The Holocaust, Industrial Killing, and
Representation (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996).
7. For the remainder of this article, my use of quotation marks around the term
genocide references the hegemonic problematics and humanist-juridical assumptions
that structure its circulation as a modern, hegemonic academic and juridical term.
In such cases, it is useful and necessary to enunciate the term as a contradictory and
contested one, rather than a self-evident and settled one.
8. Joy James, Resisting State Violence: Radicalism, Gender, and Race in U.S.
Culture (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996), 46.
9. Sylvia Wynter opens this line of analysis in her extended elaboration of how
Renaissance humanism [instantiated] an extraordinary rupture at the level of the
human species as a whole in a far-reaching 2000 interview with David Scott. See
Sylvia Wynter and David Scott, The Re-enchantment of Humanism: An Interview
with Sylvia Wynter, Small Axe 8 (September 2000): 177.
10. See Denise Ferreira da Silva, Toward a Global Idea of Race (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2007).
11. United Nations General Assembly, Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, 1948, treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS
/Volume%2078/volume-78-I-1021-E nglish.pdf.
12. William L. Patterson, ed., We Charge Genocide: The Historic Petition to the
United Nations for Relief from a Crime of the United States Government against the Negro
People (New York: Civil Rights Congress, 1951).
13. United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 2007,
www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/documents/DRIPS_en.pdf.
14. Stuart Hall, Race, Articulation, and Societies Structured in Dominance, in Black British Cultural Studies: A Reader, ed. Houston A. Baker Jr., Manthia Diawara, and Ruth H. Lindeborg (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996),
1660.
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15. We Charge Genocide, Police Violence against Chicagos Youth of Color,


report submitted to United Nations Committee against Torture (September 2014),
4. http://report.wechargegenocide.org/ (accessed 14 February 2015).
16. We Charge Genocide, About, wechargegenocide.org/about/ (accessed 14
February 2015). WCG describes itself as a grassroots, inter-generational effort to
center the voices and experiences of the young people most targeted by police violence
in Chicago. Instances of police violence reveal the underlying relationship between
marginalized communities and the state. This is a relationship of unequal access to
power and resources. This is also a relationship where violence is too often used by
the police to silence, isolate, control and repress low-i ncome people and young people
of color in particular. . . . We Charge Genocide was started to offer a vehicle for
needed organizing and social transformation. The initiative is entirely volunteer-r un.
We are Chicago residents concerned that the epidemic of police violence continues
uninterrupted in our city. We are not a 501c3 and we do this work intentionally
outside of the nonprofit industrial complex (which has sometimes silenced community advocates from being able to propose radical ideas and solutions). The name
We Charge Genocide comes from a petition filed to the United Nations in 1951,
which documented 153 racial killings and other human rights abuses mostly by the
police.
17. See Joy James, ed., Warfare in the American Homeland: Policing and Prison in
a Penal Democracy (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007).
18. Raphal Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (Washington, DC: Car
negie Endowment for International Peace, 1944), 93.
19. Fanon, Fact of Blackness, 92.
20. Sylvia Wynter, No Humans Involved: An Open Letter to My Colleagues, Forum N.H.I.: Knowledge for the Twenty-First Century 1, no. 1 (Fall 1994):
2; emphasis added.
21. Cedric Robinson, Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000).
22. Biggest Prison Strike in US History: Thousands of Georgia Prisoners to
Stage Peaceful Protest, press release, 8 December 2010. http://blackagendareport
.com/content/ga-prison-i nmates-stage-1-day-peaceful-strike-today (accessed 15 Feb
ruary 2015).
23. The discourse of the Georgia prison strikers echoes the political language
of slavery historicized by David M. Oshinsky in his study of the Mississippi State
Penitentiary, Parchman Farm. See Oshinsky, Worse Than Slavery: Parchman Farm
and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice (New York: Free Press, 1997).
24. Kung Li, Georgia Prisoner Strike Comes Out of Lockdown, Facing
South, Institute for Southern Studies, 16 December 2010, www.southernstudies.org
/2010/12/georgia-prisoner-strike-comes-out-of-lockdown.html (accessed 16 October
2014).
25. Aside from those sources previously cited, the most useful editorial discussions and reportage on the Georgia prisoners strike include Bruce A. Dixon, Georgia
Inmates Stage 1-Day Peaceful Strike Today, Black Agenda Report, 9 December 2010,
blackagendareport.com/content/ga-p rison-i nmates-s tage-1-d ay-p eaceful-s trike
-today; Dixon, Arrested Georgia Correctional Officer Oversaw Vicious Beating of
Prisoner in His Capacity as Supervisor, Black Agenda Report, 15 March 2011, black
agendareport.com/content/arrested-g eorgia-c orrectional-officer- oversaw-v icious
-beating-prisoner-% E2%80%9C-h is-capacity%E2%80%9D-super; Dixon and Glen
Ford, GA Prison Inmate Strike Enters New Phase, Prisoners Demand Human
Rights, Education, Wages for Work, Black Agenda Report, 15 December 2010,
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blackagendareport.com/content/ga-prison-i nmate-strike- enters-new-phase-prisoner


-demand-human-r ights-education-wages-work; Julianne Hing, Georgia Prisoners End Protest, but Continue Demands, Colorlines, 15 December 2010, colorlines
.com/archives/2010/12/georgia _prisoners_strike_for_pay_decent _food.html;
Chara Fisher Jackson and Vanita Gupta, Georgia Prison Strike an Outgrowth of
Nations Addiction to Incarceration, Daily Kos: News- Community-Action, 6 January 2011, www.dailykos.com/story/2011/01/06/933848/- G eorgia-P rison- Strike-a n
- O utgrowth- of-Nation-s-Addiction-to-I ncarceration; and Michelle Chen, Georgia
Prison Strike: A Hidden Labor Force Resists, Huffington Post, 20 December 2010,
www.huffingtonpost.com/michelle- chen/georgia-prison-strike-a-h _b_798928.html.
26. The website of the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity coalition (prisoner
hungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/) has maintained what is, by far, the most comprehensive, timely, and accurate accounts of both the Pelican Bay strike itself and
the larger set of institutional (i.e., CDCR) responses and political actions that have
followed in the aftermath of the July 2011 mobilization. Its archive of press releases
(all available for download) amounts to historical documentation of major and minor
developments in the hunger strike and its surrounding contexts. Most germane to
the descriptive sketch offered here are the following Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity press releases: Prisoners across at Least 6 California Prisons Join Pelican Bay
Hunger Strikers, 5 July 2011; Pelican Bay Hunger Strike Spreading throughout
California System, 7 July 2011; Medical Conditions Reach Crisis in Pelican Bay
Hunger Strike: Advocates Demand Access to Strike Leaders, Negotiations, 12 July
2011; California Prison Hunger Strike Resumes: Prisoners Cite Continued Torture,
CDCR Bad Faith Negotiations, 3 September 2011; and With 12,000 Participants
Last Week, Prisoner Hunger Strike Begins 8th Day: CDCR Bars Family Member
Visits, 3 October 2011.
27. While the CDCR officially acknowledged at least 6,500 statewide participants in the strike, support organizations calculated 12,000 participants at the height
of the prison strike in fall 2011. See Pelican Bay Hunger Strike Spreading; Prisoners at Corcoran Continue Hunger Strike, Concerns Rise over Health Conditions,
Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity, 10 February 2012, prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity
.wordpress.com/2012/02/10/prisoners-at- cocoran- continue-hunger-strike- concerns
-r ise- over-health- conditions/#more-1683. Nancy Kinkaid, the federal receiver
responsible for overseeing medical care in the California prison system, confirmed
the official estimate of 6,500 in an interview with KPCC Radio in Southern California. See Prison Hunger Strike Over, Official Says, 89.3 KPCC (Los Angeles, CA),
21 July 2011, www.scpr.org/news/2011/07/21/27821/medical-official-prisoner-hunger
- strike- over/.
28. See About Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity, prisonerhungerstrike
solidarity.wordpress.com/about/ (accessed 10 November 2012).
29. In addition to the resources available through the Prisoner Hunger Strike
Solidarity website cited above, see Victoria Laws excellent summary analysis of the
strike, California Prison Hunger Strike Ends, Conditions of Immense Torture
Continue, Critical Mass Progress, Criminal Injustice Series, criticalmassprogress
.com/2011/10/19/ci-c alifornia-prison-hunger-s trike-e nds-c onditions-of-i mmense
-torture-continue/ (accessed 10 November 2012). Other useful reportage on the
Pelican Bay strike includes Michael Montgomery, Pelican Bay Inmates Agree to
End 3-Week Hunger Strike, California Watch, 21 July 2011, californiawatch.org
/dailyreport/pelican-bay-i nmates-agree-end-3 -week-hunger-strike-11624; SHU captive Mutope Duguma, Pelican Bay SHU Prisoners Plan to Resume Hunger Strike

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Sept. 26, San Francisco Bay View, 1 September 2011, sfbayview.com/2011/pelican


-bay-shu-prisoners-plan-to-resume-hunger-strike-sept-26/; the San Francisco Bay
View compilation of letters from SHU prisoners Duguma, Paul Sangu Jones, and
Randall Sondai Ellis, Retaliation at Pelican Bay: Letters from the SHU, 14 October 2011, sfbayview.com/2011/retaliation-at-pelican-bay-letters-f rom-t he- shu/; and
Ian Lovett, California Prison Hunger Strike Resumes as Sides Dig In, New York
Times, 7 October 2011, www.nytimes.com/2011/10/08/us/hunger-strike-resumes-in
-california-prisons.html?_r=1.
30. Undergraduate research project, Ethnic Studies 177, Critical Studies of the
US Prison Industrial Complex, fall quarter 2011, University of California, Riverside.
This project entailed the collective work of about a dozen undergraduate students,
whose primary tasks were (a) to gather information and biographical testimonials
from local (Southern California) extended family members active in the mobilization of free-world solidarity with the Pelican Bay hunger strikers and their demands
and (b) to organize a public forum in which the family members, in collaboration
with the students, could discuss the historical context of the strike and articulate the
frameworks through which they conceptualized the role of nonimprisoned people
(especially college and university student activists) in generating critical narratives
regarding the intimate and structural social conditions of racial and class criminalization and incarceration. The summary insights in this article regarding the Pelican
Bay hunger strike largely derive from this research project and the public forum
produced by it.
31. Avery Gordon, Ghostly Matters: Haunting and the Sociological Imagination,
2nd ed. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008).
32. For a variety of elaborations on radical feminist conceptions of the prison
as an apparatus of state violence that both transcends the institutional site of incarceration and focuses gendered technologies of power on imprisoned, formerly imprisoned, and nonimprisoned women, see the late Safiya Bukharis memoir The War
Before: The True Life Story of Becoming a Black Panther, Keeping the Faith in Prison
and Fighting for Those Left Behind (New York: Feminist Press, 2010); Julia Sudbury,
ed., Global Lockdown: Race, Gender, and the Prison-Industrial Complex (New York:
Routledge, 2005); and Ruth Wilson Gilmores discussion of the organization Mothers Reclaiming Our Children in Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition
in Globalizing California (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007), 1812 40.
33. Bruce A. Dixon, GA Prison Inmates Stage 1-Day Peaceful Strike Today,
Black Agenda Report, 9 December 2010, blackagendareport.com/content/ga-prison
-i nmates- stage-1- day-peaceful- strike-today. As I have previously noted, while the
Georgia prisoners strike was unevenly covered by various news and online media
venues, the most consistent and insightful reporting was notably undertaken by Black
Agenda Report (blackagendareport.com/) and Dixon, its managing editor. Dixons
article offered a prompt reproduction of the Georgia strikes initial press release in
its entirety, including the full list of demands.
34. Prisoners Demands, Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity, 3 April 2011,
prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/the-prisoners-demands-2/. The Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity website printed the original five core demands upon
their issuance and remains the central informational organ for the Pelican Bay hunger strike.
35. Joo Costa Vargas, Introduction: The Urgency Imperative of Genocide,
in Never Meant to Survive: Genocide and Utopias in Black Diaspora Communities (New
York: Rowman and Littlefield, 2008), xixx xxi.

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36. See Orlando Patterson, Slavery and Social Death: A Comparative Study
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985). A significant and thoughtful
reemergence and reinterpretation of Pattersons texts has been well under way over
the last decade, traversing multiple disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields. Here,
I am invoking the manner in which Pattersons comparative understanding of the
structures of natal alienation, social death, and slave fungibility lends itself to a fluid
theoretical appropriation for conceptualizing the material conditions formed by the
Thirteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, in which the status of involuntary
servitude is not abolished but is instead limited to those who have been duly convicted of crimes.
37. Patrick Wolfe, Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native,
Journal of Genocide Research 8, no. 4 (2006): 3874 09.
38. Ibid., 388.
39. Ibid., 401.
40. Dylan Rodrguez, Black Studies in Impasse, Black Scholar 44, no. 2
(2014): 3759.
41. This distinction draws from Ferreira da Silvas delineation between the
transparent I and the affectable Other in the emergence of racial discourse as
such. See Silva, Toward a Global Idea of Race.
42. Adam Jones, Gendercide and Genocide, Journal of Genocide Research 2,
no. 2 (2000): 191.
43. For an excellent example of such a feminist intervention within genocide
studies, see Chile Eboe-Osuji, Rape as Genocide: Some Questions Arising, Journal
of Genocide Research 9, no. 2 (2007): 25173.
44. See Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz: If This Is a Man, trans. Stuart Woolf
(New York: Orion Press, 1959); and Giorgio Agamben, Remnants of Auschwitz: The
Witness and the Archive (Brooklyn, NY: Zone Books, 1999).
45. Alex G. Weheliye, Habeas Viscus: Racializing Assemblages, Biopolitics, and
Black Feminist Theories of the Human (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014),
56.

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